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2026 Lexus NX 450h+ review: Lacks relevance

  • Writer: Mitchell Weitzman
    Mitchell Weitzman
  • 55 minutes ago
  • 6 min read

A legitimately nice car is undone by details and disappointing gas mileage, and that's before discovering the price

2026 Lexus NX 450h+ Ultra White

2026 Lexus NX 450+ Review by The Road Beat


If you want a truly great luxury crossover, look right past this Lexus and go straight to the Genesis GV70. Even in base form with the 2.5-liter engine, the Genesis matches and consistently beats the NX in the ways that matter. Back to the Lexus in question: the NX 450+ is an underwhelming experience that frustrates and disappoints when it comes to the small details that buyers actually have to live with. Now, that might be forgivable at $50K, which is along the starting price for an NX-class. But for this top 450h+ model, It’s unforgivable at $67,134 as-tested.


Picks


Still a sharp-looking crossover

This isn’t a new shape anymore—this NX design has been with us for over three years—but it still looks tidy and taut in a sea of overly busy crossovers with their contradicting and overzealous angles. Lexus used to try too hard to stand out, but lately they’ve done the opposite, and it’s paying off. The NX is handsome without being obnoxious and every bit as brand new in 2026.



A genuinely premium cabin

A Lexus will never feel as indulgent as a competing Mercedes equivalent (that regularly costs 25% more), but even with Lexus positioned as an “entry” luxury product, the NX’s interior rarely disappoints. The vibrant red leather in my tester adds drama, but the bigger takeaway is how solid everything feels owing to Lexus' solid build quality meant to outlast its driver.


2026 Lexus NX 450h+ Luxury red leather interior

This cabin has a weight and surety that no Toyota (Lexus' parent company) can match. Even premium Toyotas like the Crown cheap out in places where Lexus doesn’t, and it shows. Touch points feel secure, materials feel upscale, and there were zero rattles over battered neighborhood pavement.


Excellent seats

The seats deserve a shoutout: supremely comfortable, perfectly shaped, and with the kind of adjustment range that makes long drives effortless. Lexus also offers “F Sport” seats in some models, but those tend to shove my head and neck forward in an awkward way. These standard seats are far better for this car's purpose.


ultra white Lexus NX 450h+ exterior rear three quarter

A relaxed highway cruiser

The hospitable and accommodating NX is at its best eating up highway miles. It’s comfortable, quiet, and easy to place on the road. The steering is direct and nicely weighted, and overall it’s a calm, confident commuter.


And yes—like most modern Toyota and Lexus products—you can disable some of the more annoying driver assists (like automatic high beams), which is appreciated by people like me.


Easy touchscreen

The large center touchscreen is one of the easiest infotainment systems to live with. The Toyota/Lexus interface makes browsing radio and media simple, and best of all: there’s still a volume knob. Thank you! Same goes for the physical temperature knobs for the climate control—simple, intuitive, and friendly.


2026 Lexus NX 450h+ read leather seats

Nicks


This sounds like a great car so far. But the NX 450+ stumbles in areas buyers will notice immediately—and for the price, the mistakes are hard to excuse.


Disappointing fuel economy

This plug-in hybrid advertises 34 MPG even if you never plug it in. But after a week of mixed country, suburban, and highway driving, I averaged just 27 MPG—and that was with a light foot and a genuine effort to drive efficiently.


Sure, it will admittedly do better if you charge this plug-in hybrid for maximum effect. But if you’re not charging it regularly—and studies show most do not with plug-in hybrids—the efficiency is simply unimpressive. In fact, that’s the same mileage I’ve seen from a Genesis GV70 with a turbocharged four-cylinder and zero hybrid assist.


2026 Lexus NX 450h+ Luxury rear seats panoramic sunroof

The Lexus also sounds poor for a luxury vehicle, not helped by the CVT holding constant RPM that burns into your brain. Yet my main takeaway is the very weak gas mileage, and it was actually under 26 for a while until I took a long freeway cruise to Davis and back which helped it out.


An annoying CVT

For a luxury vehicle, the NX doesn’t sound premium when accelerating. The continuously variable transmission holds constant RPM in a way that becomes irritating as the four-cylinder engine holds a constant drone under throttle, especially during passing or climbing grades. It’s not unbearable, but it doesn’t feel “$67K Lexus” either.


Shockingly poor AWD drivetrain

This may be the biggest deal-breaker of the entire car. All-wheel drive is supposed to make a vehicle feel more secure in low-traction conditions by distributing torque to all four wheels instead of just two. Like when it's wet, for example. Yet even in slightly damp conditions, a moderate throttle input while merging onto a 45 MPH road triggered egregious front wheelspin and a Christmas tree of traction-related warning lights.


That’s not just annoying—it’s alarming. AWD is supposed to remove hesitation in situations by promoting security through grip. And in this NX, it made me second-guess the car in the exact moment it was supposed to help. This behavior was sadly repeatable and defeats the very purpose of why anyone buys an AWD vehicle in the first place. AWD Genesis vehicles have never done this, neither an AWD BMW has never done this to me, nor an Audi Quattro. So, if you’re shopping specifically for an AWD crossover, this is an unacceptable failure.


2026 Lexus NX 450h+ interior 14 inch touchscreen display

Steering wheel controls: a usability disaster

Both CarPlay and the central touchscreen work more than fine for the average human, but it's the steering wheel controls that remain positively confounding. To use the cruise control, skip a song, or adjust settings, the unlabeled buttons bring up an overlay menu on the dash and head-up display, and often with a delay. Adjusting key features like the safety settings requires digging through layers, hitting the virtual “more,” and generally fumbling through a system that feels designed to distract you. It’s a mess. A proper disaster-class mess. Muscle memory over long-term usage will help greatly, but the acclimation period feels like it was almost designed to cause collisions.


Terrible heated seats and weak heated steering wheel

This one sounds petty—until you live with it. These heated seats are among the worst I’ve tested in years. Even on a 30-minute drive home in cold weather, the seats never got more than lukewarm on the highest setting. Two passengers even noticed the same thing for their seats. And on my 15-minute commute in the early morning, they barely warmed at all to the point of being pointless.


The heated steering wheel was equally disappointing: it occasionally got warm in one random spot where your hands don’t naturally rest, then cooled itself off like it was a mistake. For the record, the heaters were always set manually to High, not “Auto.” For a luxury car—just any brand new car—this is unacceptable yet is maddening for a brand like Lexus to perform so poorly here. Even the normal heater took too long to get hot.


2026 Lexus NX 450h+ interior door panel detail

Pointless door handle design

I also dislike the exterior door handles. They look like normal handles, but they don’t actually move. Instead, they’re oversized, bulbous, and less satisfying to use when they electronically lock and unlock the vehicle. In other words: Lexus found a way to make a normal door latch worse.


The price is the punchline

I’m sorry, but a $67K compact Lexus with heated seats that barely work and AWD behavior that can’t be trusted in damp conditions is so far from a value proposition. I take back what I said earlier about Lexus automatically equaling value—at least in this configuration.


Undone by everyday necessities


People buy Toyota and Lexus because they’ve built a reputation for long-term dependability. But this NX 450+ is undone by basic, everyday necessities. The AWD system didn’t inspire confidence. The heated seats barely functioned. The steering wheel heater felt like a half-finished feature. Those may sound like “little” things, but they’re exactly the features Lexus and luxury car buyers interact with daily.


Then there’s the fuel economy. Many buyers won’t plug in their plug-in hybrid consistently, and if they’re going to commit to charging, they may as well just buy an EV in the first place at this price point. The reality is that, without regular charging, the NX 450+ doesn’t deliver the efficiency advantage it promises.


Everything points back to the Genesis GV70: its flashier and nicer interior, stronger and enjoyable performance, better real-world drivability, AWD that actually works, and a price that makes far more sense.

A Lexus NX starting at $50K can still be a compelling buy. But at almost $70,000, this underwhelming NX 450+ simply isn’t worth it.


2026 Lexus NX image gallery:



2026 Lexus NX 450h+ Luxury – Basic Specifications

Price as-tested: $67,134

Powertrain & Performance

  • Engine: 2.5 L inline-4 hybrid

  • Drivetrain: All-Wheel Drive (AWD)

  • Transmission: Electronically controlled CVT (e-CVT)

  • Combined System Output: ~304 hp total

  • Electric-Only Range (EPA est.): ~37 miles

  • EPA Combined MPG (gas only, battery depleted): ~34 MPG

  • Real World MPG: 27 MPG

  • Towing Capacity: 2,000 lbs

  • Turning Diameter (curb to curb): ~38 ft

  • Fuel Tank Capacity: 14.5 gal

  • Curb Weight: ~4,500 lbs

Dimensions & Capacity

  • Seating Capacity: 5

  • Cargo Volume (behind 2nd row): 23 cu ft

  • Cargo Volume (rear seats folded): 47 cu ft

  • Wheelbase: 106 in

  • Length: 184 in

  • Width (without mirrors): 73 in

  • Height: 66 in

  • Ground Clearance: 8 in

  • Wheels: 20-inch alloy wheels

Warranty (U.S. Coverage)

  • Basic (New Vehicle Limited): 4 years / 50,000 miles

  • Powertrain: 6 years / 70,000 miles

  • Hybrid System Components: 8 years / 100,000 miles

  • Traction Battery (High-Voltage): 10 years / 150,000 miles

  • Corrosion Perforation: 6 years / unlimited miles

  • Roadside Assistance: 4 years / unlimited miles

  • Maintenance Warranty (complimentary factory): 1 year / 10,000 miles

Standard Safety & Driver Aids

  • Adaptive Cruise Control

  • Lane-Keeping/Lane-Trace Assist

  • Blind-Spot Monitoring

  • Rear Cross-Traffic Alert

  • Automatic Emergency Braking(Features may vary slightly by market/package)


Thank you for reading The Road Beat's 2026 Lexus NX 450h+ review






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